They said another forum that this combination does not work on emulators, and the only solution is to temporarily assign L and R to the same key. Since Game-oldies doesn't let you reconfigure the keys on your keyboard, that means that the situation is unsolvable. (I can't get past on my save game either.)

Well what kind of keyboard are you using? Most standard keyborads have a three key limit and that's only if one of them is a controller key (Like ctrl alt shift and windows). I have a gaming keyboard and it turns out my laptop has some weird temporary macro feature for the keyboard, so that's prloly why I got it no prob. If you you don't really play a lot of PC games though, a gaming keyboards not really worth the money. I'd go to autohotkey.com, download the free autohotkey program, let it save the "Example script" or whatever it calls it, and type

^2:: SendPlay sdx

On it's own line, save the text file, and reload the window. That should make it so every time you hit ctrl+2 while the AutoHotkeyProgram is running, whatever window you currently have activated will receive the string "sdx" instead. The key or number before the :: can be whatever you want, the ^ just makes the control key part of the input. But if you make it a letter button just make you have a hotkey defined as a:: Suspend which toggles all hotkeys on/off (except Hotkeys starting with a Suspend) Again, "a" is just an example, I'd do something with ctrl (^), shift (+), or alt (!) that you won't accidentally press. If customizable key combos don't happen any time soon I'll throw something together that takes text input and has contextual hotkey activation for each game you're playing and post it on here so ya'll can just copy, paste it. But it'd proly just be more trouble than it's worth since AHK programs with that many conditions and hotkeys can slow down your computer; it basically has to scream back and forth between programs every time you press a button. It's pretty easy to use if you just wanna do it yourself on a game-by-game basis, though. Im not sure the program works on Mac's, but I know there's a free Macintosh Macro program which is probably just awful but I'm sure it'd give you a basic key combo at the very least. Just make sure it's actually Mac or a legit company that published it since most Macro programs have a "record action" function that'd be pretty easy for a third party to co-opt.

Oh no worries Admin. I understand that you're busy with other things and if we can spare you with the little things that we can experiment with and fix on our own than we probably should (especially since you're doing this all on your own).